Thursday 16th
September
Check in for those with accommodation at St John’s for Thursday
night and thereafter.
Friday 17th
September
Check in for those
arriving during the day for Friday night accommodation and
thereafter.
8:00 Breakfast in the dining hall for overnight guests.
9:30 Meet at the
Porters Lodge, St John’s College, where we will be divided into 2
groups:
Group A will take a
short walk to Jesus College in Turl Street where there will be a
guided tour of TEL’s old Oxford University college and a chance to
view some of the artefacts they hold. The tour will last
approximately 1 hour.
Group B will walk to
the recently re-opened and nearby Ashmolean Museum for a tour
organised by the Education Department staff of the museum. There
will be an opportunity to view items relating to Lawrence, some of
which were displayed at the Imperial War Museum exhibition in 2005.
At approximately 10:
30 Group A will walk to the Ashmolean for coffee before the
commencement of their tour. Group B, after coffee, will walk to
Jesus College.
Lunch will be
available from 12:30 (at delegate cost) following both tours at
either the coffee shop in the Ashmolean or, if delegates so wish, in
the new roof top restaurant.
14:00: Return by
foot to the auditorium at St John’s College for the two afternoon
lectures.
All three of the day’s
locations are in Central Oxford.
Delegates who have
mobility problems and are unable to walk between the locations
should indicate as such on the booking form so that arrangements can
be made for transportation. No transport can be provided unless it
has been advised in advance on the booking form.
14:00 to 14:30
Symposium registration in the Garden Quadrangle.
Welcome from the Chairman, Peter Leney
14:30 to 15:30 Dr. Vino Roy: The Search for Identity in
the Writings of
T.E. Lawrence and Sayyid Qutb
The terrorist attacks
in New York in 2001, and the U.S. led war in Afghanistan and Iraq
have renewed interest in the “clash of civilisations" theory that
views cultural and religious differences as the main source of
international conflict. Vino Roy’s presentation will attempt to
provide a better understanding of the identity-conflicts of today,
through a comparative study of the lives and writings of T. E.
Lawrence and Sayyid Qutb. The writings of both men expose the
misrepresentations and earnest desire for mutual and self
understanding that has often characterized both Western and Arab
representations of the “other.”
Vino Roy manages the
distance learning program for the Leader Development and Education
for Sustained Peace program which educates US military and civilian
leaders on US objectives, regional geopolitical and cultural
frameworks in Iraq, Afghanistan and other regions.
15:30 to
16:00 Tea
16:00 to 17:00: Alan Payne: The Journeys of T E Lawrence
The starting point for
this presentation is the thesis that whilst T.E.Lawrence eschewed
all involvement with competitive sport, he did throughout his life
undertake long journeys; on foot, on bicycles, on camels and on
Brough Superior motorcycles. In many cases, these journeys and
particular his wartime camel rides were born out of necessity. Many
other journeys and particularly his motorcycle journeys were
undertaken for the sheer joy of the journey itself. The common theme
for most of the journeys is that he looked on them as a challenge
and a test of his own abilities and powers of endurance. They were a
test for himself, but there is ample evidence that he delighted in
telling others of his achievements. This presentation will explore
the nature of these journeys which were taken in the earlier years
of the 20th Century; particularly with the cycling, walking and
motorcycle journeys, comparisons will be made with modern times.
Alan Payne gave a lecture to the 2008 Symposium on “T.E.Lawrence and
Brough Superior motorcycles”. Much of this presentation was based on
a lifetime’s experience with Brough Superior motorcycles. Beyond his
extensive knowledge he is a keen long distance cyclist and in the
last few years has cycled in France, Belgium, Holland, Germany and
Denmark and has now travelled as far as Sweden on the North Sea
Cycle Route. During the 1990’s he made 5 trips to the Nepal Himalaya
including the full trek to Everest. He has also walked and climbed
extensively in the Pyrenees, the Alps and many parts of Britain,
particularly in North Wales. He is a member of two mountaineering
clubs. He now lives in the Dartmoor National Park and works part
time as a Planning Consultant and is Chairman of a Building
Preservation Trust
17:00 to
17:15 Question and answer session with the speakers on
the day’s papers, chaired by Pieter Shipster
19:00.
Dinner (at delegates own cost) in a central
Oxford location
TBA.
Saturday 18th
September
Check in for those
arriving during the day for Saturday night accommodation and
thereafter.
8:30
Breakfast in the main dining hall for
overnight guests
9:00 to 10:00
Symposium registration in the Garden Quadrangle.
10.00
Welcome from the Chairman, Peter Leney
10:15 to
11:15: Dr. Andrew Williams: Humour in The Mint?
Andrew’s talk will
focus on Lawrence’s writing of his daybook of the RAF, The Mint.
Something that is often overlooked in the scholarship surrounding
Lawrence is his sense of humour. Lawrence’s sense of
mischievousness comes through in The Mint, and in his letters
surrounding the text. Often, this sense of fun masks a darker side
to Lawrence. Through a look at selected passages from his letters
and The Mint, he will add to the appreciation of this remarkable
character.
Andrew Williams has
taught in the English Departments of Université Sainte Anne, the
Université de Quebec a Trois Rivières, Bishop’s University and
Dawson College. He was first drawn to the figure of T.E. Lawrence
through David Lean’s film and soon became fascinated by the
differences between the “film” Lawrence and the “real” Lawrence. He
is currently at work on a book examining Lawrence’s influence on
Modernism.
11:15 to 11:45 Coffee
11:45
to12:45 Dr. David Murphy: Colonel P.C. Joyce and the Arab
Revolt
This paper will explore the career of this Galway-born officer who
served with Lawrence during the Arab Revolt. A serving officer in
the Connaught Rangers, Joyce had served in South Africa during the
2nd Anglo-Boer War and was based in Cairo from 1907. From 1916 he
served in Arabia and was commanding officer of Operation Hedgehog -
the British mission to the Arab Northern Army. Drawing on Joyce's
own papers, this lecture will examine his wartime career and his
relationship with T.E. Lawrence and also other leading figures in
the revolt such as Prince Feisal and Jafar Pasha. Joyce's later
career in Iraq will also be referred to and it will be shown that he
played a crucial role in the making of modern Arabia.
David Murphy is a graduate of University College Dublin and Trinity
College Dublin. He was a major contributor to the Royal Irish
Academy's Dictionary of Irish Biography and currently lectures in
military history and strategic studies at NUI Maynooth. In this
capacity, he also teaches at the Irish Military College. His
publications include Ireland and the Crimean War (Dublin, 2002) and
The Arab Revolt: Lawrence sets Arabia Ablaze (Osprey, 2008). He is
currently working on a short biography of Lawrence for the Osprey
Command series.
12:45 to
14:00 Lunch in St John’s College dining hall
14:00 to 15:00 Philip Walker: The Jeddah Diary of
Captain T P
Goodchild during the Arab
Revolt, 1916
Captain Goodchild was sent to the Hejaz to buy camels for the
advance of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force through Sinai and
Palestine. His travelling companions on HMS “Lama” included T E
Lawrence and Ronald Storrs. Goodchild was attached to the Jeddah
Agency under Col. C E Wilson, and began his diary at a crucial time,
in October 1916, when the Arab Revolt was stalling and risked
failure. Philip Walker’s paper will address the diary’s significance
and will attempt to put Goodchild’s words into their military and
political context.
Philip Walker is a retired archaeologist who spent most of his
career as an Inspector of Ancient Monuments with English Heritage.
He has travelled in Palestine (the West Bank), Libya, Morocco and
Central Asia and became interested in Lawrence when he acquired a
First World War diary, the subject of this paper, that was written
during the Arab Revolt. His particular interests are the
relationship between the Arab Revolt and British intelligence, and
the procurement of camels for the Palestine campaign.
15:00 to 15:30 Tea
15:30 to 16:30
Dr Eugene Rogan: The Druze and Karaka Revolts of
1910: Prelude to the Arab
Revolt
In 1910, the Ottomans
faced major revolts in both the Druze Mountain to the Southeast of
Damascus, and in the town of Karak, now in southern Jordan. For two
weeks, the Ottomans struggled to contain a major insurgency they
feared might spread throughout the Syrian Desert as far as the Hejaz
and Yemen beyond. Fear swept Jerusalem and Damascus, of a tribal
insurgency that would overwhelm Ottoman defenders and expose the
townspeople to tribal violence. In the aftermath of these events,
Arab deputies in the Ottoman parliament began to petition for
clemency for the Druze and Karaka rebels as part of a growing
Arabism political sentiment. In the process, the urban nationalists
of Damascus came to appreciate the potential of united tribal action
to undermine Ottoman rule in the Arab provinces. The events of
1910, and the clemency campaign of 1912-13, played a key role in
promoting the idea of a wartime alliance between urban nationalists
and Arab tribesmen that resulted in the 1916 Arab Revolt of T.E.
Lawrence fame.
Dr Eugene Rogan is
Director of the Middle East Centre at St Anthony’s College, Oxford,
and has taught the Modern History of the Middle East at Oxford since
1991. He took his BA in Economics from Columbia, and his MA and Ph.D
in Middle Eastern History from Harvard. He is the author of the
Arabs: A History.
16:30 to
17:00 Question and answer session with the speakers on
the day’s papers, chaired by Pieter Shipster
19:00 Sherry party in the Garden
Quadrangle, followed by the Society’s 25th Anniversary Dinner in St
John’s College Dining Hall.
Guest after dinner
speaker Sir Mark Allen CMG. One of Britain's preeminent Arabists.
Sir Mark served in British Foreign Service for 30 years and lived
for many years in the Middle East. During his service he developed a
keen appreciation of the nuances of Middle Eastern culture and
politics. Since retiring from public service, Sir Mark has worked as
a special advisor for BP.. Sir Mark studied Arabic at Oxford, where
he is now a Senior Associate member of St. Antony's College.
Sunday 19th
September
Check in for those
arriving during the day for Sunday night accommodation
8:00 to
9:30 Breakfast in the main dining hall for overnight
guests
9:00 to 10:00
Symposium registration in the Garden Quadrangle.
10:15 to 11:15 Dr Eveline Van der Steen: T.E. Lawrence
and the tribes
T.E. Lawrence’s claim to fame is intimately related to his actions
in the First World War, and his interaction with the tribal groups.
Tribal wartime politics and loyalties are complex, involving a
mixture of inter-tribal relationships, personal and tribal interests
and perceptions of honour. Lawrence understood this, and used it to
involve a number of tribes, particularly the Huwaytat and the Rwala
in the battle. However, we learn relatively little about how these
tribes saw the war and their own role in it: Lawrence is silent
about the tribes in the other camp. This paper looks at the tribal
politics of the time, to provide a background for the events he
describes.
Eveline van der Steen is an archaeologist and anthropologist
specializing in the Near East. She did her PhD at the University of
Groningen, Netherlands, on the Bronze and Iron Ages of the Jordan
Valley. These days one of her special interests is the politics of
tribal societies in the Near East (particularly Levant and Arabia)
in the 19th and early 20th century. She has written numerous
articles on the subject, developing a model for tribal societies
that can be used in the archaeology of the region. Presently she is
preparing a monograph on the subject.
Eveline is based in Liverpool, as honorary research fellow of the
University of Liverpool.
11:15 to
11:45 Coffee
11:45 to 12:45 Dr. Polly Mohs: Military Intelligence
and the Arab Revolt
Lawrence’s insights on
insurgency and guerrilla warfare have gained renewed attention owing
to the recent Iraq and Afghanistan wars, but Lawrence’s achievements
with intelligence are perhaps even more relevant. Not only did
Lawrence promote the integration of Humint, Sigint and Imint
as tactical force-multipliers for the Arab fighters in the field,
but his famous reassessment of the Hejaz war as a classic
insurgency, to be expanded as an intelligence-led irregular
campaign, drew entirely on
political and military intelligence – and depended on intelligence
to succeed. This session will discuss Lawrence’s innovations with
intelligence and its influence on policy for the Revolt.
Polly Mohs began
studying T. E. Lawrence in the historic Reading Room of the former
British Library during summer breaks from college. She obtained her
B.A. (Northwestern University) and M.A. (Columbia University) in
English Literature before earning a doctorate in History at the
University
of Cambridge under the supervision of Chris Andrew. Polly published
her dissertation research as a monograph in 2008 with Routledge/Taylor
& Francis for their Series in Intelligence: Military Intelligence
and the Arab Revolt: the first modern intelligence war.
12:45 to 13:45
Lunch in St John’s College dining hall
13:45 to 14:45 Dr Roderick Bailey: T E Lawrence and the
Special
Operations Executive (SOE)
Drawing on recently declassified files, this paper explores the
connections between T E Lawrence and Britain’s Special Operations
Executive, the secret organisation set up in the Second World War to
encourage resistance and carry out sabotage in enemy-occupied
territory. It examines the impact of Lawrence’s ideas on revolt and
guerrilla warfare on SOE planning and operations. It also reveals,
for the first time, enduring links in terms of personnel: several
officers who had served with Lawrence in the desert went on to work
for SOE, as did A W Lawrence, T E’s youngest brother.
A graduate of Cambridge and Edinburgh Universities and a former
Alistair Horne Fellow at St Antony’s College, Oxford, Dr. Roderick
Bailey is a professional historian and a specialist in the study of
Britain’s Special Operations Executive. He is the author of the
critically acclaimed The Wildest Province: SOE in the Land of the
Eagle, a study of SOE operations in the occupied Balkans, and two
Sunday Times top-ten bestsellers: Forgotten Voices of the Secret
War, an oral history of SOE, and Forgotten Voices of D-Day
14:45 to 15:15 Tea
15:15 to 16:15 Philip Neale: Richard Aldington:
Lawrence’s strongest
critic
In 1955, Richard Aldington’s book Lawrence of Arabia: A Biographical
Enquiry caused a massive storm of protest. The opposition had
developed well before publication, through the co-ordinated actions
of a powerful group of people including Basil Liddell-Hart, Robert
Graves and A W Lawrence. Aldington’s prolific literary career and
health were destroyed, his life drifted into obscurity, and his
reputation still suffers today. This paper looks at the controversy
surrounding the book and what Aldington was trying to achieve. It
also examines his life and presents an appraisal of his literary
skills, particularly as a war poet.
Philip Neale is a pharmacist by profession and works for the
Medicines Regulatory Agency in drug safety. He is Treasurer for the
TEL Society and his interest in Lawrence developed following the
National Portrait Gallery exhibition in 1988. He also has a strong
interest in the First World War and twentieth century art and
literature, particularly relating to the Bloomsbury Group. Philip is
the author of different journal articles as well as a small book in
the Bloomsbury Heritage series. He also presented a paper at the TEL
Society Symposium in 2008.
15:30 to 16:00 Tea
16:00 to
16:30 Question and answer session with the speakers on
the day’s papers, chaired by Pieter Shipster
16:45 The T. E. Lawrence Society Annual
General Meeting
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